[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 26, 2010)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E93]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN HONOR OF ANGEL ISLAND IMMIGRATION STATION
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HON. LYNN C. WOOLSEY
of california
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Ms. WOOLSEY. Madam Speaker, I rise today with a mixture of sorrow and
pride to honor the Angel Island Immigration Station on its 100th
anniversary--sorrow because of the Station's history of unjust
treatment of immigrants, especially those from China, and pride because
we are now acknowledging and respecting the struggle and courage of
these immigrants.
Located off the coast of Tiburon, California, in Angel Island State
Park in San Francisco Bay, the Station is the site of the detention of
175,000 Chinese immigrants from 1910 to 1940. Because of the Chinese
Exclusion Act, many of them were held for weeks, months or years in a
prison-like barracks where life was difficult and humiliating.
The ghosts of these people speak to us through poetry written and
etched into the walls of these barracks. The experiences reflected here
remind us that it is essential to treat all people with dignity and
respect. In today's debates about immigration policy, at a time when we
have moved beyond the inhumanity of the Chinese Exclusion Act, these
ghosts tell us to learn from our past and set a new course that
reflects who we are as a nation.
And now, thanks to the Angel Island Immigration Station Foundation
and its many supporters and partners, including the California State
Parks and the National Park Service, the Immigration Station is being
restored. It helps us understand this rich and complex history by
hosting more than 50,000 people, including 30,000 schoolchildren, every
year.
Angel Island itself was once inhabited by the native Miwoks and was
discovered by Europeans in 1769. It has served for both cattle ranching
and military uses, from the Civil War era Camp Reynolds to a base for
Nike missiles in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1891, a quarantine station for
immigrants was established and, on January 21, 1910, over 200 Chinese
immigrants shipped from San Francisco marked the opening of the Angel
Island Immigration Station. It was officially closed in 1946, and many
of the barracks were razed when the Island became a State Park in 1957.
Today, the Park's stunning views and abundant wildlife complement the
historic structures.
As a mother and grandmother, I am grateful that the restored Angel
Island Immigration Station will continue to keep the past alive for our
young people. And as the Congresswoman representing this unique
resource, I have had the privilege of participating in its
rehabilitation by securing Federal funding for a bi-partisan effort
that recognizes that we all have a stake in remembering that America is
a nation of immigrants.
Madam Speaker, Angel Island Immigration Station today, on the
occasion of its 100th anniversary, is both a reminder and a challenge.
It reminds us that America hasn't always lived up to its highest ideals
of freedom and equality. But it challenges us to live up to those
ideals now and in the future. One of the poems from its walls
poignantly serves to educate and inspire us:
In the quiet of night, I heard, faintly, the whistling of
wind.
The forms and shadows saddened me; upon seeing the landscape,
I composed a poem.
The floating clouds, the fog, darken the sky.
The moon shines faintly as the insects chirp.
Grief and bitterness entwined are heaven sent.
The sad person sits alone, leaning by a window.
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